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Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Research Program Web Conference July 17, 2009

Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Research Program Web Conference July 17, 2009. Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Research Program. 5 year, $8 million study: 2010-2014. GOA IERP Overarching Question.

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Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Research Program Web Conference July 17, 2009

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  1. Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Research Program Web Conference July 17, 2009

  2. Gulf of Alaska Integrated Ecosystem Research Program • 5 year, $8 million study: 2010-2014

  3. GOA IERP Overarching Question How do environmental and anthropogenic processes, including climate change, affect various trophic levels and dynamic linkages among trophic levels, with particular emphasis on fish and fisheries, marine mammals and seabirds within the Gulf of Alaska?

  4. GOA IERP Modular Approach Upper Trophic Level Component $2.8M Program Mgmt, Communication, Education and Outreach Ecosystem Modeling Component Forage-base Component $2.0M $0.7M $1.0M Lower Trophic Level and Physical Oceanography Component $1.5M Full vertical integration across all trophic linkages will be achieved via focal meetings after the full proposal selection of individually competed components

  5. GOA IERP Modular Approach Upper Trophic Level Component ~ focus on one or more upper trophic level species, at least one of which is a commercially important fish species Forage-base Component ~ focus on the forage base which influences the productivity of the top predator(s) chosen Lower Trophic Level and Physical Oceanography Component ~ focus on the biological and physical oceanographic parameters on which this portion of the ecosystem is based Ecosystem Modeling Component ~ develop a strong, vertically-integrated ecosystem model to describe and predict the response of that portion of the ecosystem to environmental and anthropogenic change

  6. Moss et al. – Surviving the gauntlet

  7. RFP requirements ~ The critical aspect is vertical integration. ~ The field sampling schedule, at minimum, must be responsive to the needs and timing of the UTL component ~ The temporal and spatial scales of the modeling component, at minimum, must coordinate with and be responsive to the UTL component.

  8. Soundness of Project Design (C-2a) ~ identify and justify the study species/parameters/measurements that will form the basis of your proposed work. Justify why these are essential to address your objectives in terms of ecological significance. Describing the elements and quantifiable process of your research. Specifically: ~ identify and justify the essential processes to be investigated. Justify why these are essential to address your objectives in terms of ecological significance. ~ describe the present state of knowledge (including ongoing NPRB and other research) relevant to your proposed work; ~ describe and justify the proposed work in relation to the selected UTL Component project which your proposed project must link to; ~ describe the proposed work’s relation to previous work and/or work in progress by all principal and co-investigators; ~ describe the data sources (retrospective and current) to be used; ~ indicate and justify the geographic location(s) and the spatial and temporal scales to be investigated (these must be relevant to and in context with the chosen UTL component project)

  9. Project Responsiveness (D) ~ State how your proposal is responsive to the data and information needs of the selected UTL component. Also indicate what information and data your proposed work will provide to the two other components of the GOAIERP. ~ Note that proposal evaluation by the Science Panel and the Board will be on the basis of the scientific merit and on how well the proposed work informs and integrates with the UTL component and the overall vertically integrated program.

  10. Data Management Plan (F) ~ Data management for the entire vertically integrated module is included as part of the UTL Component responsibilities (see statement of work of selected UTL proposal). ~ You should describe the overall data management needs of your component, including data storage space, computation time required, when you would require data from other components of the GOAIERP and when your data would be available to other investigators in the GOAIERP team.

  11. PROCESS RELATED QUESTIONS?

  12. Next steps ~ Internet Seminars with UTL 17 July & 2 September, 2009 ~ Full proposal Submission Deadline (all components) October 2, 2009 ~ NPRB Funding Decisions January 15, 2010 ~ Notification to PI’s end January 2010 ~ 2 focal meetings to complete vertical integration and coordination First half of 2010 ~ Project Management Plan: By summer 2010 the selected components will need to demonstrate clearly to NPRB that a coordinated, integrated program has been developed and will be managed as such. Team members will need to develop and agree to a project management plan, based on requirements identified by NPRB program staff (money released) ~ Preliminary work/planning and organization Summer 2010-Spring 2011 ~ Field work begins 2011

  13. FINAL QUESTIONS?

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